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    Doomsday Discs Fallout Famine

    Doomsday Discs Fallout Famine

    4.7
    (3 Reviews)
    Rate this Disc

    The Doomsday Discs Famine is now PDGA approved and will spread to the masses as an understable-to-neutral distance driver that can be handled by preppers and survivors alike. Whether you're new to the game, or experienced in life's darkest moments, the Famine is inevitable. Whether flexing to great distances or using it to transition into deeper fairways, this disc will find its way into your bag.

    This disc is now PDGA approved as of 8/7/23!!

    Manufacturer Flight Numbers 12.0/5.0/-2.0/1.0
    Reviewer Flight Numbers 12/5/-1.9/1
    Retail:
    $16.99
    Our Price:
    $14.99
    You Save:
    $2.00

    Fallout Details

    Fallout plastic is a Doomsday blend for their Catastrophic Line of discs that are made in the USA. This blend is long lasting and feels great with just the right amount of flexibility. It has a subtle secondary color "splattered" into the main disc color.

    Famine Dimensions

    • Diameter: 21.10 cm
    • Height: 1.70 cm
    • Rim Depth: 1.20 cm
    • Rim Width: 2.20 cm
    • Max Weight: 175g

    Additional Information

    • Primary Use: Distance Driver
    • Stability: Understable
    • Recommended Skill Level: Beginner, Intermediate, Everyone
    • Plastic grade(s): Premium
    • Beadless

    Reviews

    Spring time
    My Flight Ratings: 12/5/-2/1 Neutral Throwing Distance: 400 Straight Score: Slightly Understable

    Jul 11, 2024 20:08 PM

    This is my favorite distance driver in Doomsday's lineup.  The Famine is a very good workhorse driver that has some turn and great glide.  It's much less overstable than the Plague so it's real nice for hyzer-flip bombs or for long anhyzer distance shots.  The fallout plastic is probably the most understable plastic, my fallout Famines have a lot of turn and great glide.  They can get a little wild in the wind but they are great for max distance shots and also straight hyzer-flips where I don't want the disc to finish too far to the left.  My Biohazard Famine is more overstable and has a touch less glide, but it's more reliable in the wind and still gives me great distance.  

    spookyxunicycle
    My Flight Ratings: 12/4/-1/1 Neutral Throwing Distance: 375 Straight Score: Slightly Understable

    May 23, 2024 12:23 PM

    I have had two Proto-beta Fallout Famines, I enjoyed the first one so much I instantly replaced it when it was lost. For the longest time I was saying "please get PDGA approved!" so I wouldn't have to take it out of the bag, and it was. At elevation in Colorado, this flies like a more neutral Destroyer allowing for nice S-lines out the box and hyzer-flips when thrown hard.

    The hand feel is a bit weird on this disc, a little sharp in the palm, but it flies so nice. The plastic holds up quite well and I'm interested in trying this mold out in some of the newer plastics here on Infinite Discs.

    HyzerFlop
    My Flight Ratings: 12/6/-2/1 Neutral Throwing Distance: N/A Straight Score: N/A

    Jan 27, 2023 11:59 AM

    Not 100% what the bad reviews here are about. I have 2 of these in the Fallout plastic, and while there is some rough finishing (flashing, edges, etc...), it's nothing that's not easily correctable, and doesn't affect the flight.

    This is my go-to straight shot max distance driver now. I can rip this on hyzer, it will stand up to flat, and then just sail straight off into the sunset. I can fairly consistently get 400ft of straight flight out of it. No obscene amounts of turn unless you throw it into a headwind, or throw it flat and hard, in which case it would be an ideal roller disc.

    No issues with plastic durability, but it is a fairly unique feel that might turn people off. The Fallout plastic is the most stable of the 3 it's offered in, with Uranium being a middle ground "true to flight numbers" plastic, and Meltdown is the most understable of them all.

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